Unit 48
Modals and Present Perfect Passive Phrasal
Verbs
In
Unit 43
, we discussed the use of several modal and semimodal auxiliaries in the present
perfect. These same modals and semimodals are commonly used in passive sentences. The
modal or semimodal is followed by have or the contraction ’ve, been, and the past participle:
could + have + been + past participle
would + have + been + past participle
should + have + been + past participle
have to + have + been + past participle
must + have + been + past participle
might + have + been + past participle
may + have + been + past participle
Let’s compare a present perfect active sentence containing a modal with a present perfect
passive sentence containing a modal:
active: Jane might have switched on the light.
passive: The light might have been switched on.
As we have seen, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive
sentence. Also, there is no object in the passive sentence, so the passive phrasal verb cannot
be separated. The object of the active sentence can be used in a by phrase:
active: Jane might have switched on the light.
passive: The light might have been switched on (by Jane).
And once again we see that it is not always easy to distinguish between a past participle:
The burglar alarm must have been switched off (by the night manager because
he’s the only one with a key).
and a participle adjective:
The burglar alarm must have been switched off (because if it had been on,
everyone in the neighborhood would have heard it when the burglars smashed
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the window of the jewelry store).
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